The 31-year-old Baghdatis kissed the court when the match ended after giving a long embrace at the net to longtime friend Sela. The Cypriot is seeking his fifth career ATP title.

“We know each other from a very young age,” Baghdatis said. “A lot of emotions.”

Playing on the stadium court two days after calling a side court “ridiculously bad,” the 28-year-old Mannarino lost the first three games of the opening set and fell behind 5-1 before rallying on Newport’s grass courts.

The tournament is held on the grounds of the International Tennis Hall of Fame.

Marat Safin and Justine Henin head the 2016 class that’s set to be enshrined during a center-court ceremony Saturday.

Play was delayed for nearly three hours by rain after Mannarino won the first set.

Second-seeded Ivo Karlovic of Croatia, a finalist in Newport the last two year, had his quarterfinal match against Switzerland’s Marco Chiudinelli postponed until Friday.

Mannarino said that playing inside the stadium helped him relax.

“For sure, I know that the stadium court is much better than the other court,” he said. “I knew that today was going to be some real tennis on the court. That’s pretty important to me. If I’m going to lose, I’m going to because the guy was better than me. I don’t like to lose because the conditions were ugly for the players.”

Once play resumed, Mannarino continued his strong play.

“I was just trying to focus on my game (during the delay) and what I have to do,” he said. “It worked pretty well. When I got back on court I was pretty consistent.”

Mannarino, the only Frenchman remaining in the field, was handed a French flag by a media member that wished him a “Happy Bastille Day” at a post-match press conference.

On Tuesday, Mannarino said of a side court: “The court is just ridiculously bad. We’re playing (next to) the other court. You’ve got the camera, the microphone on the court. You can’t really move. This is really not respectful for the players to come, that kind of court.”